Zimmerman v. the Kroger Company, Unpublished Decision (8-9-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 9, 2000
DocketCase No. 00CA002.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Zimmerman v. the Kroger Company, Unpublished Decision (8-9-2000) (Zimmerman v. the Kroger Company, Unpublished Decision (8-9-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zimmerman v. the Kroger Company, Unpublished Decision (8-9-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY
Dorothy I. Zimmerman and her husband, Charles Zimmerman, appeal the Jackson County Court of Common Pleas' decision granting summary judgment in favor of The Kroger Company. On appeal, the Zimmermans contend that they presented evidence giving rise to a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Kroger negligently caused her to fall and break her hip. Because the Zimmermans presented evidence that Kroger created the hazard in question, and evidence that Kroger knew or should have known about the hazard, we agree. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the trial court.

I.
On the afternoon of September 23, 1998, the Zimmermans purchased groceries from the Kroger store on East Main Street in Jackson, Ohio. As they left the store, Mrs. Zimmerman tripped and fell. The injuries from the fall required Mrs. Zimmerman to undergo a total hip replacement surgery, extensive hospitalization, physical therapy, and in-home nursing care.

The Zimmermans filed a complaint alleging negligence and seeking compensation for Mrs. Zimmerman's medical bills and pain and suffering and for Mr. Zimmerman's loss of consortium. Kroger filed a motion for summary judgment, and the Zimmermans filed a motion contra. The depositions, affidavits and photographs submitted by the parties reveal the following facts.

When exiting the Jackson Kroger store, a customer must pass through two doors, an inner and an outer door. Specifically, the customer must pass through the inner exit door, turn left, and pass through the outer exit door into the parking lot. In other words, the inner and outer exit doors are located at a right angle to each other, such that a customer must walk in an "L" shaped pattern through a vestibule to exit the store. The inner and outer entrance doors are situated in a smaller "L" shaped configuration. An exiting customer has an entrance door on her left each time she passes through an exit door.

All four doors are equipped with sensory floor mats that sense the presence of a customer and cause the door to open automatically. A plastic divider, approximately three feet high by four feet long, separates the inner entrance door and its sensory floor mat from the inner exit door. In addition to the sensory floor mats, Kroger sometimes uses rubber-backed, movable carpet floor mats that measure approximately three feet wide by eight feet long. On the day of Mrs. Zimmerman's fall, Kroger had placed a movable floor mat in front of the inner entrance door in the vestibule, with the eight-foot length of the mat running parallel to the plastic divider between the inner and outer doors. A customer exiting the store would necessarily walk over the three-foot width of this mat after she passed through the inner exit door and turned left.

All four of the doors are glass. However, the bottom portion of each door has several metal bars running across it. These bars are designed to protect the doors from damages caused by carts striking the doors. The bars obstruct the view of the floor directly beyond the door.

The Zimmermans submitted the deposition testimony of Kroger store co-manager Kathi Gundlah. Gundlah stated that Kroger routinely uses a movable floor mat in front of the inner door in the vestibule in wet weather, and admitted that Mrs. Zimmerman fell on a dry day. Gundlah testified that the movable floor mats always "creep" during the course of a day. Kroger baggers are responsible for checking the mats frequently and straightening the mats when they are askew. Gundlah usually straightens the mat in the vestibule around a dozen times per day.

The deposition testimony of Gundlah and Connie Wiseman, a cashier on duty at Kroger on the day of Mrs. Zimmerman's fall, revealed that Kroger baggers pass through the entrance and exit doors four to six times every half hour. Each time a Kroger bagger assists a customer with taking groceries to his car, the bagger is to return the customer's cart and any stray carts the bagger finds in the parking lot. A bagger pushes a train of six or seven carts into the store approximately five times per hour. The baggers must jockey these trains of carts around the same right angle turn that customers traverse. Gundlah testified that one or two customers pushing single carts could not cause the mat to creep three or four inches.

The Zimmermans also submitted the affadavit of Donald Kadunc, a mechanical engineer, as an expert witness. Kadunc averred that he observed the movement of the floor mat at Kroger over the course of a sunny afternoon. Kadunc opined, to a reasonable degree of engineering probability, that normal customer traffic can not cause the mat to move. Kadunc further opined that the only factor contributing to the mat's movement was the Kroger baggers' practice of pushing trains of five to ten carts over the mat at hard right angles. Finally, Kadunc opined that it would take two or three hours for the mat to creep three or four inches up the plastic divider. Kroger filed a motion to strike Kadunc's affidavit from the record, and the Zimmerman's filed a motion contra.

Mr. and Mrs. Zimmerman's depositions revealed that, on the day of her fall, Mrs. Zimmerman passed through the inner exit door and turned left. Her foot caught on something, and she fell in front of the outer exit door. Mr. Zimmerman, who was following Mrs. Zimmerman with their cart, saw her fall and heard the rubber backing on the floor mat slap down onto the floor. After Mrs. Zimmerman fell, she and Mr. Zimmerman noticed that the lengthwise side of the floor mat had crept toward the exit door, and that the lengthwise edge had been pushed up against the plastic divider, such that the edge stood approximately four inches off the floor where it met the plastic divider. Gundlah and Wiseman also testified that the mat had crept approximately four inches up against the divider, and Gundlah stated that the mat was six inches away from its normal position.

Based upon this evidence, the trial court determined that the Zimmermans did not know the cause of Mrs. Zimmerman's fall and that they failed to produce any evidence that Kroger knew or should have known that the floor mat was out of place at the location of Mrs. Zimmerman's fall. Accordingly, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Kroger. The trial court never ruled on Kroger's motion to strike Kadunc's affadavit.

The Zimmermans appeal the trial court's judgment, asserting the following assignment of error:

I. The trial court erred in sustaining defendant-appellee's motion for summary judgment.

II.
Summary judgment is appropriate only when it has been established: (1) that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact; (2) that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law; and (3) that reasonable minds can come to only one conclusion, and that conclusion is adverse to the nonmoving party. Civ.R. 56 (A). See Bostic v. Connor (1988),37 Ohio St.3d 144, 146; Morehead v. Conley (1991), 75 Ohio App.3d 409,411. In ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the court must construe the record and all inferences therefrom in the opposing party's favor. Doe v. First United Methodist Church (1994), 68 Ohio St.3d 531, 535.

The burden of showing that no genuine issue of material fact exists falls upon the party who moves for summary judgment.Dresher v. Burt (1996), 75 Ohio St.3d 280, 294

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Zimmerman v. the Kroger Company, Unpublished Decision (8-9-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zimmerman-v-the-kroger-company-unpublished-decision-8-9-2000-ohioctapp-2000.